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Cambridge FCE Writing Paper: Complete Guide

1 Overview of the Exam Writing Paper

The FCE Writing paper consists of two tasks that you must complete in 80 minutes. Part 1 is always a mandatory essay (140-190 words). Part 2 offers a choice between different text types including articles, reports, reviews, and emails (140-190 words). Each task tests your ability to communicate effectively with the target reader.

Key Terms

essay
a formal piece of writing that discusses a topic in detail
target reader
the person or group you are writing for

💬 Section 1: Understanding Task Requirements

Writing coach helping student prepare for FCE Writing exam

Maria: “I'm worried about the writing paper. What should I focus on first?”
Coach: “Let's start with understanding your target reader. Who will be reading your essay?”
Maria: “Well, the examiners will read it, but should I write for them?”
Coach: “Actually, each task has a specific target reader – like a magazine editor or a friend. Have you noticed these in the instructions?”
Maria: “Do I need to use all the bullet points in the task?”
Coach: “Yes, each bullet point is essential for full task completion. What else do you think the examiner looks for?”
Maria: “I guess they want me to write in the right style for my target reader?”
Coach: “Exactly! The register needs to match your target reader. Shall we practice identifying these in some sample tasks?”

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2 Task Type Summaries

For Part 1, you write an essay responding to an opinion or situation. Part 2 options include:
Articles: engaging pieces for magazines/websites
Reports: formal documents presenting facts/recommendations
Reviews: evaluations of books, films, or places
Emails: formal or informal correspondence
Each task requires appropriate register and coherence.

Key Terms

register
the level of formality in your writing
coherence
logical connection between ideas

💬 Section 2: Task Type Analysis

Writing workshop discussing different FCE writing tasks

Instructor: “Let's look at different writing tasks. What makes a good article different from a formal letter?”
Alex: “Is it about using different register?”
Instructor: “Yes! And how do we maintain coherence throughout our writing?”
Alex: “We need to link our ideas clearly?”
Instructor: “Exactly. Can you think of ways to make your writing more coherent?”
Alex: “Using connecting words and organizing my paragraphs logically?”
Instructor: “Perfect! Now, how would the register change if you're writing to a friend versus a manager?”

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3 What Examiners Look For

Examiners assess your work using specific assessment criteria:

Content: covering all points in the task

Organisation: clear paragraphing and linking

Language: accurate grammar and appropriate vocabulary

Task completion: meeting the word count and purpose

Key Terms

assessment criteria
the standards used to judge your writing
organisation
how ideas are arranged and connected
task completion
successfully finishing all parts of the writing task

📝 Key Vocabulary Recap

essaya formal piece of writing that discusses a topic in detail
target readerthe person or group you are writing for
registerthe level of formality in your writing
coherencelogical connection between ideas
assessment criteriathe standards used to judge your writing
organisationhow ideas are arranged and connected
task completionsuccessfully finishing all parts of the writing task
word countthe number of words required for the task
cohesionthe use of linking words and references to connect ideas
paragraph structurehow ideas are organized within sections of text
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